Remembering Suzanne - From Vineeth:

From Vineeth: We spoke of our literary salon when we would get old, a salon of 2, all the books you told me about, the shows we loved, how you would make the most astute connections across fact,

Remembering Suzanne - From Buzz:

From Buzz: Although there may only be one reality, there are many paths to it, and many ways of looking at it.  Because of this, although science is often seen as a search for cold, hard truths,

Remembering Suzanne - From Rolf:

From Rolf: Suzanne, to be kept in mind and heart is not to die, is to stay alive.

Remembering Suzanne - From Britta and Stefan with Jonathan and Tabea:

From Britta and Stefan with Jonathan and Tabea: Sitting on the sunny terrace of a nice little restaurant in Dresden not even a month ago and celebrating the birthday of one of her son’s closest

Remembering Suzanne - From the Hyman Lab:

From the Hyman Lab: As a new member of the Hyman Lab, it would usually take a while before you realized that Suzanne and Tony were married. What you would quickly realize at the MPI-CBG, however, is

Remembering Suzanne - From Regis:

From Regis: "Suzanne, I was lucky enough to work in your lab, that was in the “old days”, 1998, about two years before moving from EMBL Heidelberg to MPI-CBG Dresden. You gave me your trust from

Remembering Suzanne - From Ecki:

From Ecki: I lost a great colleague. When I started as an RGL at MPI-CBG, I did start with the question: Will this all work out? Suzanne was tremendously helpful, extremely encouraging, and a gentle

Remembering Suzanne - From Raphael:

From Raphael: My thoughts accompany Max and Luke, and Tony, and other Suzanne's relatives, as well as all of her close friends and colleagues, and in particular those I know at the MPI-CBG. Suzanne

Remembering Suzanne - From Carol:

From Carol: Suzanne and I were postdocs together in Tom Kornberg's lab between 1990 and 1993. Suzanne was one of the sweetest tempered and congenial people I have ever worked with. We shared a love

Search results 61 until 69 of 69

Publications

* joint first author # joint corresponding author

2024
Annette Bergter, Helmut Lippert, Gael Launay, Petra Haas, Isabelle Koester, Pierre P. Laissue, Tomas Parrado, Jeremy Graham, Jürgen Mayer, Johannes Girstmair, Pavel Tomančák, Wiebke Jahr, Benjamin Schmid, Jan Huisken, Emmanuel G. Reynaud
Commercial and Open-Source Systems.
In: Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscopy. (Eds.) Emmanuel G. Reynaud,Weinheim,Wiley-VCH (2024),149-201 Ch. 6
DOI
In this chapter, the authors present some of the commercial or open-source systems available. Now, it is important to remember that most part of the systems described are relatively recent and they are evolving rapidly as the technology and the integration of multimodal systems improve at a very fast pace. The history of ZEISS and light sheet microscopy reaches back over a hundred years and was always characterized by a close collaboration between engineers and scientist. A classical light sheet setup implicates new features compared with conventional microscopy, and ZEISS was aware that a bundle of questions had to be answered to derive a consistent concept for a commercial system. The illumination units are designed to work with a fibered laser source and allow direct imaging of an optical section with a single frame at full camera resolution. Special attention has been given to the chamber design and its sample mounting accessories.
2019
Frank Jülicher
Suzanne Eaton (1959-2019).
Development, 146(21) Art. No. dev185538 (2019)
DOI
Suzanne Eaton, Professor at the Technical University Dresden and Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden, tragically died on 2 July 2019. Suzanne was a remarkable person, both as a scientist and as a human being. Having worked closely with Suzanne for many years, I remember here some of her key scientific contributions.